Yankees non-tender five players, including Mark Leiter Jr. and Ian Hamilton

Friday is MLB's arbitration deadline and the Yankees have quite a few players who are eligible.

There are 14 players whom the Yankees have to either tender or non-tender, which includes some big names, and pieces in the bullpen and bench. What GM Brian Cashman and the organization decide on Friday will determine who will become a free agent and who will be staying for 2026. Also, those who do get tendered could go to arbitration to determine their salary for the upcoming season.

Of course, the Yankees could do away with the arbitration process if they and the player agree to a deal. 

Here's all the arbitration and tender news from the Yankees...

Nov. 21, 5:55 p.m.

The Yankees non-tendered five players, most from the bullpen. Mark Leiter Jr., Ian Hamilton, Scott Effross and Jake Cousins were not given contracts for the 2026 season. Of course, the team could negotiate with the relievers to bring them back, but all four are now unrestricted free agents.

The other name is Michael Arias. 

Arias was traded to the Yankees from the Cubs back in January for cash considerations. He made 17 appearances with Double-A Somerset, where he pitched to a 2.57 ERA.

In addition, the Yankees have tendered contracts to other eligible players, which includes: Jazz Chisholm Jr., Jose Caballero, Anthony Volpe, Luis Gil, Jake Bird, David Bednar, Camilo Doval and Fernando Cruz.

Nov. 21, 5:00 p.m.

The Yankees and starter Clarke Schmidt have agreed on a one-year deal worth $4.5 million, according to multiple reports. Schmidt and the Yankees avoid arbitration.

Schmidt had a solid 2025 for the Yanks, pitching to a 3.32 ERA across 14 starts. But after starting the season on the IL, the right-hander's year ended in July after undergoing Tommy John surgery, the second of his career.

Nov. 21, 4:45 p.m.

The Yankees and utilityman Oswaldo Cabrera have agreed to a $1.2 million contract, avoiding arbitration, according to multiple reports.

Cabrera, who missed most of 2025 after suffering a season-ending foot injury sliding into home plate, played just 34 games this past season. During that time, he slashed .243/.322..308 with an OPS of .631. He was the team's everyday third baseman, but could also play the outfield and around the infield. 

The move makes sense, giving manager Aaron Boone a versatile bench piece for next year. 

Mets tender contracts to six players, including Tylor Megill and David Peterson

The Mets announced a flurry of roster moves prior to Friday's arbitration deadline. Here's all of the arbitration and tender news from Queens...


Nov. 21, 5:16 p.m.

Of the nine players eligible in the process, the Mets have signed or tendered 2026 contracts to the following: LHP David Peterson, C Francisco Alavrez, RHP Tylor Megill, C Luis Torrens, RHP Huascar Brazobán, and RHP Reed Garrett.

The Mets opted not to tender contracts to LHP Danny Young, LHP Jose Castillo, and RHP Max Kranick. As a result, all three relievers will become free agents.

Nov. 21, 4:35 p.m. 

The Mets and outfielder Tyrone Taylor have agreed to a $3.8 million contract for the 2026 season to avoid arbitration, according to Mark Feinsand of MLB.com.

Taylor, who was acquired by the Mets via trade with the Brewers in December 2023, didn't deliver desired results this past season. While the 31-year-old appeared in 113 games and provided well-above-average defense, he slashed .223/.279/.319 overall and spent time on the injured list due to a late-summer hamstring strain.

There's still positional value with Taylor, even though the Mets are searching for a player who offers greater production in the center-field role. If the club's offseason goes according to plan, Taylor -- entering his age-32 season -- will serve as a fourth outfielder next spring.

In seven big-league campaigns, Taylor has hit .238 with 93 doubles, 50 home runs, 13 triples, and 198 RBI (574 games).

2025 Fantasy Baseball Steals Recap: Juan Soto runs wild, Shohei Ohtani puts on the brakes

Stolen base are one of the most exciting plays in baseball. The anticipation of a speedster reaching first, the murmur of a crowd knowing they're going to run, and the bang-bang play at second to try and catch them is intoxicating.

Sadly, they’d faded over the years until rule changes after the 2022 season brought them back in a big way.

This was another banner year for base stealers and I’m going to tell you all about who ran wild. Also, we’re going to walk through some disappointing base stealers – be it due to inefficiency or lack of desire – plus some interesting trends to watch league-wide.

MLB: Atlanta Braves at Cleveland Guardians
Stay up to date with the MLB free agent market this offseason, including player signings, contract details, and team fits as the 2025-26 Hot Stove heats up.

2025 MLB Stolen Base Leaders

Here is the stolen base leaderboard from the regular season.

Player
SB
CS
José Caballero
49
11
José Ramírez
44
7
Chandler Simpson
44
12
Juan Soto
38
4
Bobby Witt Jr.
38
9
Oneil Cruz
38
5
Elly De La Cruz
37
8
Trea Turner
36
7
Pete Crow-Armstrong
35
8
Victor Scott II
34
4

A surprising league-leader, José Caballero took the stolen base crown despite having just 370 plate appearances. Only Elly De La Cruz stole more than his 93 bases over the past two seasons, and Caballero got there with 542 fewer PA. When he plays, he will run.

How does José Ramírez keep doing it? He just completed his second straight 40-steal season. These were the first times he reached that milestone in his career and he waited until turning 31 to do so. He is a marvel.

Chandler Simpson was tied for second-most steals despite being called up three weeks into the season and then getting sent down again for most of June. He was also caught more than anyone in the league. His defense and offense are both questionable traits, so it’s anyone’s guess as to if he’ll go into next season as a starter in Tampa Bay.

Next, here’s the stolen base leaderboard for just the second-half.

Player
SB
CS
Juan Soto
27
3
Jazz Chisholm Jr.
21
4
Corbin Carroll
21
2
Gunnar Henderson
20
2
Josh Naylor
19
0
Jose Caballero
18
4
Chandler Simpson
18
6
Francisco Lindor
16
4
Trevor Story
15
1
Jose Ramirez
15
2
Randy Arozarena
15
4
Agustín Ramírez
15
1

Juan Soto, man. For him to have stolen 27 bases in 64 games after the All-Star break and wind up with the fourth-most in the league was astounding.

One of the key questions heading into next season is how many bags to expect as an encore. Soto gave most of the credit for this newfound abilityto now former Mets’ first base coach Antoan Richardson, who will have that same role with the Braves this coming season.

Can Soto hold the skills Richardson helped him develop? Should we expect some of the Braves players to run more? Both could wind up being true or untrue and it will be a hot-button topic during draft season.

Corbin Carroll and Gunnar Henderson each stole far more bases in the second half compared to the first when they were dealing with injuries.

Josh Naylor stole 26 consecutive bases successfully from May onward and 19 of which came after being traded to the Mariners in late July. He is still quite slow, so there’s a question as to whether this will sustain next season despite his return to Seattle.

Agustín Ramírez has a chance to be a true unicorn with 30-30 potential from the catcher position. He also could find himself on the razor’s edge of everyday playing time given his atrocious defense behind the plate and poor on-base skills.

Lastly, here’s a list of players who either ran far less than we’d have hoped or were inefficient when doing so.

Player
SB
CS
Jonathan India
0
4
Jackson Merrill
1
2
Bryan Reynolds
3
2
Lars Nootbaar
4
5
Bo Bichette
4
3
Ernie Clement
6
5
Daylen Lile
8
6
Masyn Winn
9
5
Jose Altuve
10
6
Jacob Young
15
11
Jackson Holliday
17
11
Anthony Volpe
18
8
Shohei Ohtani
20
6
Brice Turang
24
8

Shohei Ohtani shouldn’t be considered over Aaron Judge for the first overall pick in any weekly set line-up leagues if he’s a 20-steal player like he’s been most of his career compared to the 56 he swiped in 2024 when he wasn’t pitching.

Jackson Merrill got a concussion on a stolen base attempt in June and did run again for the rest of the season. There could be sneaky upside on his projections heading into next season if he chooses to run again.

Masyn Winn offers next to no fantasy value if he can’t hit and doesn’t run, like last season.

Similarly, Jackson Holliday and Anthony Volpe couple poor seasons at the plate with woeful efficiency on the base paths. They need to take steps forward in some areas to be considered viable options heading into 2026.

It’s funny that Brice Turang’s steals fell by more than 50% and he was still the top second baseman in most leagues. He could approach first round value if he pairs this newfound 20-homer power with the 50 bases he stole in 2024. There’s also a chance he’s a colossal bust if he reverts to the slap hitter he was last season with this year’s low stolen base total.

2025 League Wide Stolen Base Trends

This was the third season of MLB’s new rules meant to put stolen bases back into the game and it’s clear that they’ve done that. Yet, it seems pitchers and catchers are beginning to better understand this new frontier.

Year
SB
CS
CS%
SBA
% Change
2025
3440
989
28.8%
4429
-3.3%
2024
3617
961
26.6%
4578
+4.8%
2023
3503
866
24.7%
4369
+32.5%
2022
2486
811
32.6%
3297
N/A

Obviously, stolen bases boomed in 2023 when the new rules were implemented. Runners were successful far more often and in turn, that led to far more stolen bases being attempted. From the league’s perspective, this was both the hope and the goal.

Realizing the greater chance of success, teams pushed the envelope even further the following season. They were caught more often though. It’s possible that teams got a little cocky in deciding who should get the green light.

Then, this season, runners were caught more often and fewer stolen bases were attempted. While the difference is relatively small, that could signify a slight strategic shift with another full season of data.

Part of that may be the defense catching up. Jerry Weinstein is a baseball lifer who’s been coaching in some capacity since 1966. For reference, that’s 30 years before I was born. His current role is with the Cubs as a Special Assistant to the General Manager and his bio reads “professional baseball coach.”

He recently shared some interesting data from the legendary Tom Tango about throwing accuracy data when catching a would-be base stealer.

This tells us that catchers are now intending to throw more towards the first base side of second for a tag higher up on the base stealer's body rather than the old school adage of throwing directly to the base so the runner slides into it.

Part of this is the increased rate of head-first slides and ability of a runner to dodge a tag being placed directly next to the bag. Also, this could be a subtle strategic shift as stolen bases became easier to come by and teams try to fight back.

Correlation doesn’t lead to causation, but it’s interesting to note and feels like more and more tags at second base are being made higher up on runners’ bodies when watching games. That’s why baseball is the best, there’s always a solution to a problem. It will be fun to track these trends heading into the 2026 season.

One Rangers Prospect To Keep and Eye Out For

 Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Friday sure comes around in a hurry; and that's a good thing because it's Ask The Maven time. Today's question comes via Charlie Yokofsky of Ardsley. Take it away, Charlie:

NOW THAT PROSPECTS GABE PERREAULT AND BRENNAN OTHMANN HAVE BEEN RETURNED TO HARTFORD, WHO IMPRESSES IN THE RANGERS FARM SYSTEM?

The Maven Replies: At the moment, the best bet is 6-7 forward Nathan Aspinall of the OHL Flint Firebirds. The Markham, Ontario product was a low 2024 fifth round draft pick. 

The Maven's superscout Jess Rubenstein has submitted this report:

"Aspinall is the current best prospect. He was just named the Cogeco OHL Player Of The Week award, recording four goals, three assists and seven points over three wins.

Looking For A Blueshirt Miracle In Colorado And Finding ZilchLooking For A Blueshirt Miracle In Colorado And Finding ZilchYesterday, The Maven made it clear that it would take a miracle for the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/new-york-rangers">Rangers</a> to visit Denver's Ball Center and emerge with a victory.against the sizzling hot Avalanche.

"Also, Aspinall leads all Rangers' prospects with a 12-15-27 record. No Rangers' prospect is even close to those numbers."

WNBA's New York Liberty reportedly hires Golden State assistant Chris DeMarco to be new head coach

The trend of NBA coaches jumping to the WNBA continues.

The New York Liberty reportedly have agreed to terms with long-time Warriors assistant coach Chris DeMarco to become their new head coach, reports Shams Charania of ESPN.

DeMarco brings a serious resume, including four NBA championship rings. He has been a Warriors assistant coach for 13 years — he was hired as a video coordinator by Mark Jackson and was the lone holdover from that staff when Steve Kerr took over. DeMarco's role as an assistant coach has grown over the years, and in the past couple of years he has essentially been the team's defensive coordinator. He is also the head coach of the Bahamas men's national team.

DeMarco replaces Sandy Brondello, who won the WNBA Championship with the Liberty just a season before in 2024. However, after the team started fast at 9-0 last season, injuries began to pile up to Jonquel Jones, Breanna Stewart and others, and after the fast start the team went essentially .500 the rest of the way, finishing 27-17 and getting bounced in the first round of the playoffs by eventual finalists Phoenix. Brondello has said she felt she and Liberty management weren't on the same page.

DeMarco takes over a team that expects to return to competing for a title — if they can bring their stars back (under whatever the new CBA ends up looking like, the Liberty left themselves a lot of flexibility, but that comes with risk). Jones, Stewart, Sabrina Ionescu and all but two Liberty players (Leonie Fiebich and Nyara Sabally) are free agents.

Sabres Forward Sent Down To AHL

Mason Geertsen (© Gerry Angus-Imagn Images)

The Buffalo Sabres have announced that they have assigned Mason Geertsen to their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Rochester Americans.

Geertsen was placed on waivers on Nov. 20 and went through them unclaimed. Due to this, the Sabres were able to send him down to Rochester, where he should now be a solid part of the AHL squad's roster. 

Geertsen has played in five games this season with the Sabres, where he has posted zero points, one shot, eight hits, and 12 penalty minutes. His most recent appearance for the Sabres was on Nov. 4 against the Utah Mammoth, where he had 3:49 of ice time.

Geertsen spent this past season exclusively in the AHL with the Henderson Silver Knights, where he recorded five assists, 77 penalty minutes, and a plus-3 rating. In 447 career AHL games over 10 seasons, Geertsen has recorded 19 goals, 69 points, and 840 penalty minutes. 

No. 24 Kansas will play Vegas tournament without star freshman Darryn Peterson

No. 24 Kansas will be without standout freshman Darryn Peterson for a tournament in Las Vegas next week, coach Bill Self said Friday. The nation’s top recruit and potentially the top pick in next year’s NBA draft will miss games against Notre Dame, Syracuse and a yet-to-be-determined third opponent because of a lingering hamstring injury. "So we’re hopeful he’s running and cutting and doing all those things while we’re in Vegas, but not to the point where he’s probably ready to play.”

Dodgers boss Andrew Friedman part of team to advise Lakers in ownership transition

Dodger President of Baseball Operations Andrew Friedman, right, joined by General Manager Farhan Zaidi, speaks during a news conference in Los Angeles on Thursday, Oct. 22, 2015. Don Mattingly won't return as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers next year after agreeing with his bosses that he and the team needed a fresh start. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel
Dodgers executives Farhan Zaidi, left, and Andrew Friedman will be advising the Lakers moving forward during an ownership transition from the Buss family to new majority owner Mark Walter. (Richard Vogel / Associated Press)

The executives that Mark Walter and his Guggenheim Baseball Management trusted to turn around the Dodgers and make them World Series winners, Farhan Zaidi and Andrew Friedman, now have been enlisted to take on advisory roles with the Lakers, people not authorized to speak publicly confirmed to The Times on Friday.

Walter, the controlling owner of the Dodgers, purchased majority ownership of the Lakers for a $10-billion evaluation and has started the transition from the Buss family ownership by having Zaidi and Friedman become more involved. Friedman is the Dodgers’ president of baseball operations and has overseen a team that won three World Series titles in the last six years. Zaidi was the Dodgers’ general manager under Friedman from 2014 to 2018 before becoming president of baseball operations with the San Francisco Giants. He returned this year as an advisor with Guggenheim and also has been consulting with the Sparks, another team Walter now owns.

Both executives are known in the baseball world for relying on analytics. The Lakers have been known to have a weak analytics department, so Zaidi and Friedman will play a role in improving that. Friedman already has been talking with Rob Pelinka, the Lakers’ president of basketball operations, according to people with knowledge of the situation.

Read more:Lakers fire executives Joey and Jesse Buss and members of scouting staff

The Lakers began making changes in their front office Thursday when they fired Joey and Jesse Buss as well as some scouts. Joey Buss was an alternate governor and vice president of research and development, while Jesse was the assistant general manager and head of the scouting department.

Fresh off winning a World Series with the Dodgers, Walter, who had been a minority owner of the Lakers since he bought 27% of the franchise with Todd Boehly in 2021, promptly sat courtside for the next Lakers home game on Nov. 2. He looked on when the Lakers honored the Dodgers at a home game on Nov. 5.

Walter was part of the group that purchased the Dodgers for $2 billion in 2012. Since then the team has won three World Series titles in five appearances with 13 consecutive playoff berths.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

NBA Trade Rumors 2025-26: Where things stand with LaMelo Ball, Anthony Davis, Kyrie Irving, Ja Morant, more

There are rarely impactful November trades in the NBA — 28% of NBA players signed new contracts this offseason that make them untreatable until Dec. 15 or Jan. 15 (depending on when they signed). It's not until we're past the holidays and those dates before the burners really get turned up and things start to boil.

While there are no big-name deals even close to happening, there is still simmering trade talk around the league. Here is where things stand with the biggest names on the market.

LaMelo Ball

Does LaMelo Ball want out of Charlotte? Does he believe a move away from the only NBA home he has known — and away from coach Charles Lee's offense that emphasizes spacing the floor and somewhat deemphasizes what Ball does — would be what's best for him and his career

Depends on who you ask. Sources told Kelly Iko of Yahoo Sports that, "Star guard LaMelo Ball has grown increasingly frustrated with the organization and is open to a trade away from the franchise, multiple league sources told Yahoo Sports." LaMelo had his own response to that.

The other big question surrounding a LaMelo trade: Are the Hornets ready to pivot away from building around LaMelo? From Yahoo's Iko: "League sources say the front office is increasingly hesitant about cementing Ball as a long-term foundational piece, has become disillusioned with the 24-year-old and is open to moving him." That said, other reports quickly emerged, stating that the Hornets are not listening to offers and are not willing to discuss a trade for Ball right now. Charlotte, understandably, wants to get this team healthy and see what they have before making any moves.

There would be a market for Ball, but because of concerns about his injury history, defense, and whether he is a foundational piece, the return on any trade may not be as impressive as the Hornets or their fans expect.

Ja Morant

It doesn't take a body language expert to watch Ja Morant and see is unhappy in Memphis. With that, teams are in the "monitoring the situation" mode with Morant and the Grizzlies, waiting to see if he becomes available closer to the trade deadline, league sources told NBC Sports. As reported by Tim Bontems at ESPN: Sources expect Memphis to explore the trade market for Morant ... "I do think they'll move him," a West scout said.

Whatever comes of Morant's trade status, the other thing that has become very clear this season is that Morant does not look like the same, explosive player we have seen in the past — which will drive down his trade value. As noted by ESPN’s Bontemps, Morant took 39.6% of his shots within three feet of the basket as a rookie, 33% his first All-Star season, but that is down to 15.4% this season. He is simply not blowing by guys like he used to.

Which means there will be a sizable gap between what the Grizzlies might expect as a return for a Morant trade and the offers they will get.

Anthony Davis

Any discussion of Anthony Davis trades has to start here: Nothing is happening until he gets back on the court healthy and plays an extended period for Dallas, league sources have told NBC Sports. How he plays in those minutes will impact the quality of offers that come in, and as Marc Stein put it in his Substack this week, "with the prospect of an actual trade obviously dependent on offer quality."

While Mark Cuban said the Mavericks are not trading Davis — "We want to win" — the buzz in league circles is that Dallas will at least listen to offers. The thing besides health that will factor into those trade offers: Davis is extension eligible this summer and will want to talk about a big payday. How many teams are open to that remains to be seen.

The bottom line: Multiple reports say Dallas is willing to listen to those offers, which is a major pivot from the Nico Harrison era, when keeping Davis and building around him was tied to his ego from the Luka Doncic trade. Davis has been himself in Dallas: Brilliant on the court when available — and he wants to play and be on the court, his drive is there, he's being held out now in part to protect him from himself (at least in the eyes of the Mavs medical staff) — but nagging injuries and time missed are part of the package for the 32-year-old 10-time All-Star.

Kyrie Irving

While Dallas may be open to trading Anthony Davis, teams calling are also asking about point guard Kyrie Irving — and getting shot down. Here’s what Shams Charania of ESPN had to say on NBA Today:

"Teams are actually sniffing around Kyrie Irving: His availability on the court, potentially trade-wise, and his playing status the rest of the season. But my understanding is the Mavericks have made it clear privately that they want Kyrie Irving as a complete part of their future moving forward. He's still in recovery and rehab from that ACL tear from March. He signed a three-year deal in the offseason, but the Mavericks value his leadership on the court, off the court, and his fit with Cooper Flagg."

Watch Dallas right now and it's clear how much they need a point guard and miss Irving, so that should not be a shock that Dallas wants to keep Irving around.

Trae Young

Any Trae Young trade talk remains on hold — especially with him out injured — although plenty of teams continue to monitor the situation. Atlanta built the best possible roster to complement Young's skill set, but we only saw five games with Young and this team before teammate Mouhamed Gueye was pushed and fell into Young's knee, leading to an MCL sprain that will have him out at least a few more weeks.

Young's absence can provide the Hawks with a different perspective: What would this team look like without him, were they to trade him or let him walk in free agency this summer? In the 11 games without Young, the Hawks are 7-4 with a +5.9 net rating, with a slightly above average offense and defense. The wheels did not fall off. What that means long term remains to be seen, everything is in a holding pattern, but Atlanta is a situation other teams are watching.

Jonathan Kuminga

He is frustrated in Golden State, where he hit a shooting slump — in part caused by knee issues — that has seen him moved to the bench. That said, the bottom line has not changed: The Warriors signed Kuminga this summer to a very tradable contract and they were always going to explore the market around the trade deadline. As one veteran executive told The Stein Line: "It's one of the best trade chips in the league."

To draw the best offers for him next February, Steve Kerr will have to showcase Kuminga again as we get into December and beyond.

Giannis Antetokounmpo

Before the season, there was no hotter topic of discussion than a midseason trade of the Greek Freak, even though it was always a long shot. Now, that topic is quiet, and not just because Antetokounmpo is out for a couple of weeks with a groin strain.

Antetokounmpo and the Bucks started fast this season and have looked — when healthy — like a team that can be a threat in this season's East. "We're not the favorites, you know, but we're going to be a problem," Antetokounmpo himself said. However, it's what Antetokounmpo said just before the season started that really threw cold water on the trade rumors: "I'm here. I believe in this team. I believe in my teammates. I'm here to lead this team to wherever we can go... Now, if in six, seven months, I change my mind, I think that's human too, you're allowed to make any decision you want, but I'm locked in. I'm locked in to this team."

Six or seven months is after the NBA season. Which is when the Bucks will put a max extension offer on the table for Antetokounmpo, and things will get serious again. Until then, don't expect anything meaningful on the Antetokounmpo trade front unless the wheels fall off the Bucks on the court between now and then.

Alexandre Texier Clears Waivers, Assigned To AHL

Alexandre Texier cleared waivers on Friday and has been assigned to Springfield of the American Hockey League.

The 26-year-old was designated a non-roster player on Thursday when the St. Louis Blues activated Jake Neighbours off injured reserve and needed a roster spot for him.

The next step for Texier, who is in the final year of a two-year, $4.2 million contract he signed after being acquired from the Columbus Blue Jackets on June 28, 2024 for a 2025 fourth-round pick, is to either report to the Thunderbirds or come to a mutual agreement with the Blues to terminate his contract and become a free agent.

Texier played in just eight games this season and had one assist and 31 games last season in which he had six goals and five assists.

“For ‘Tex,’ he's an outstanding young man and just didn't find any kind of path this year to consistently stay in the lineup,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said on Thursday.

The Blues also assigned defenseman Hunter Skinner, who made his NHL debut in a 6-5 shootout loss to the Philadelphia Flyers on Nov. 14, to Springfield on Friday but made no corresponding move to bring anyone else up.

Observations From Blues' 3-2 Overtime Loss Vs. FlyersObservations From Blues' 3-2 Overtime Loss Vs. FlyersBlues have lacked killer instinct all season, another example on Thursday; fifth two-goal lead turns into lost points; Faulk putting in results offensively; critical mistake late in second period allows Flyers back into game; creating chances, not finishing is haunting this team at the momentImage

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